AGAEICINI. 71 



In woods, amongst leaves. [United States.] 



Pileus livid, brown, or umber, tinged with pink, | in. broad, convex, or 

 conico-cauipanulate, striate; gills free, or minutely adnesed, slightly ventri- 

 cose, white, or a dilute shade of the pileus ; stem 2-3 in long, fistulose, juicy, 

 smooth, except the rooting base, which is pilose, li\dd, dirty white, or 

 brownish. — J/. /. B. 



192. Agaricus (Mycena) vitilis. Fr. •• Flexile Mycena." 



Pileus membranaceous, conical, tlien expanded, papillate, 

 moist, deeply striate, becoming pale ; stem filiform, straight, 

 flexile, smooth, without juice, shining, rootmg ; gills attenuato- 

 adnate, rather distant, greyish-white. — Fr. Ejncr.j). 113. Sow. t. 

 385,/. 5. BuU.t. 518,/. 0. 



Amongst leaves. 



Stem thin, hollow, 3-6 in. long, filiform, rooting ; pileus papillate, 3-4 lin, 

 broad, striate to the middle, dry, livid, or brown, becoming pale or whitish^ 

 gills Linear, whitish, or grey, edge growing paler. 



193. Agaricus (Mycena) speireus. Fr. " Opaque Mycena." 



Pileus membranaceous, conico-convex, then plane, unpolished, 

 striate ; disc darker, at length depressed ; stem filiform, tough, 

 shining, fibrillose, rooting ; gills plane, then decurrent, distant, 

 white. — Fr. Epicr.p. 113. Berk. Out. p. 126. 



On mossy trunks. 



Stem 2 in. long, \ lin. thick; pileus 2-3 fines broad, opaque, greyish brown^ 

 sometimes fibrillose or pruinose. 



194. Agaricus (Mycena) acicula. Schcpff. "Orange 



Mycena." 



Pileus membranaceous, campanulate or convex, smooth, 

 orange-red ; margin striate, stem rooting, setaceous, tough, shin- 

 ing ; gills rounded-adnexed, ventricose, distant, yellow, becoming 

 whitish at the edge. — Fr. Epicr.p. 114. Schcef. t. 222. Eng. Fl. 

 V. p. 52. 



On leaves, twigs, &c., in woods. 



Pileus \-'i lines broad, campanulate, generally umbonate, margin striate, 

 under a powerful lens, most minutely pilose, bright orange, the umbo darkest, 

 sub-carnose, within deep orange; gills few, somewhat ventricose, adnexedor 

 adnate, with shorter ones between them, white, tinged with yellow; stem 

 about 1 in. long, quite filiform, flexuous, nearly equal, minutely pilose, like 

 the pileus, pale yellow, with a fine \dt\nxi..—Eng. Fl. 



